The Father: Made in Sweden Part I (66 page)

‘What do you mean “handle”?’

‘Not drinking.’

He wanted to see the strength, the limitless power he’d grown up with. He didn’t understand this man so well. His father was no longer so easy to read. He had to know if the man who’d taught him to punch with his whole body was still in there.

‘If the cops come, you’ll encounter them first. Can you handle it?’

‘I’ll shoot if I have to.’

‘Aim and shoot?’

‘I think I know how a damn rifle works!’

They were silent as they drove through the countryside of ancient Sweden, rune stones and Bronze Age tombs at every other intersection. Past the road to Arnö, the island they’d rented a cottage on for a few summers when they were still a family, over Hjulsta Bridge and the roundabout that separated Enköping from the E18, and then the last couple of kilometres on Highway 70. His father had raised his voice and that was good – but it wasn’t enough, he had to be pushed further.

‘So I don’t need to hide the booze tonight?’

Ivan clenched his hands, Leo saw it. Clenched them and let them lie in his lap.

‘Leo, damn it … are you trying to give me orders? Is that what you think you’re doing? Like a
real
leader?’

‘You didn’t answer. The bottle, Dad. The bottle! I have to know. Are you going to drink this away?’

‘If you’re such a
real
leader, where the hell are your brothers?’

It was that kind of aggression he wanted to see, that it was still there and came instinctively. And that his father could control it, that he’d learned how to focus it.

‘Is that why you’re here? You thought we’d do this together, like a big fucking family … damn, don’t you get it? If I still had Felix and Vincent with me, I’d sure as hell never need someone like you, Dad.’

The eyes that had just been hidden behind sombre thoughts were now clear and black – a look that could turn into a beating at any time. And Ivan’s hands weren’t shaking at all.

‘Then why aren’t they here? With their leader?’

‘They don’t want to be. Simple as that, Pappa.’

‘Are you enemies? My sons? I taught you to stick together.’

It was still in him. And he’d been able to control it. And if he could control himself, then Leo could also control him.

‘No. They just don’t want to. And when someone doesn’t want to do
something, you don’t force them to. I learned that long ago. And I’m not forcing you either. If you’re not up to it, Dad, say so now.’

The last exit. The road narrowed, its bends limiting visibility. Farmland turned into shapeless darkness outside their window.

‘Leo, are you really going to do this?’

Up ahead, the first lights of the low-rise buildings and the few family rentals that formed the small town of Heby.

‘I mean … with them? The pretend soldier? A buffoon who thinks we should attack Russia? And that woman who rearranges fake presents trying to make them look nice? Can she even drive a car? Listen, Leo. Have you really thought this through?’

‘I’ve thought of everything. There’s just one problem: you. You are the only risk.’

‘This is insane, Leo!’

‘Nine bank robberies. I know what the hell I’m doing.’

Ivan saw it all so clearly now. It had always been him in charge. But in this fucking car that wasn’t even theirs, in the icy wind that danced through the rolled-down window, it was his eldest son.

Heby was even smaller than the town he lived in. And at this time of night it was completely dark except for a kiosk at the small bus station, the pizza and kebab restaurant opposite it and the video shop. And there it was, in a rendered low-rise building with its lights on, squeezed between a tobacconist and a dentist. The bank.

‘That’s where you’ll stand tomorrow, next to those brown wood slats that mark the entrance,’ said Leo, pointing.

They rolled slowly past.

‘Or do you think it’s
insane
?’

Then the town ended. It was really just a single street, then a beautiful white church on the hill, and then the main road again.

A few kilometres north, they drove through dense forest, around a sharp bend, then two kilometres west. On the right-hand side stood a fence with a double row of mailboxes that belonged to a scattering of summer houses. Leo slowed down and turned off the paved road onto gravel, passing two large barns and a tractor. It was there they’d stop tomorrow, a natural parking spot between densely growing tree trunks. He got out, went into the woods and came back with a bundle of fir twigs already bound together in his arms, and they quickly covered the car, before starting the walk back through the black forest.

‘We’ll go the same way tomorrow. In about two hundred metres, we’ll reach the next car.’

The only light far up above the branches came from the white dots of stars, surrounding a burning half-moon. Leo tried to look at his father, but only heard his heavy breathing as his out-of-shape body ducked under the stubborn branches.

‘Dad? Say it right now.’

‘Say what?’

They stopped, engulfed by blackness, standing just an arm’s length apart.

‘So I can reconsider. Say it now. Here. Between us. Say you can’t do it. I can take it, but I want to know now – not tomorrow at breakfast.’

Before Ivan could answer they heard tyres approaching on the gravel. Headlights shone through the tree trunks. It was the same rental car that had been parked outside the house in Tumba, packed with colourful and empty parcels, with Jasper behind the wheel. Leo started towards it.

‘Leo?’

He was pushing aside branches when Ivan grabbed him.

‘Leo, look at me.’

A heavy, needle-laden branch between their faces.

‘You,
look
at me.’

Ivan pressed the branch down, broke it off.

‘I’m your father. I can do this.’

82

A LIGHT KNOCK
on the front door. It is almost inaudible, but somehow it migrates through the house.

Anneli was standing at the worktop, cutting thick slices of bread for sandwiches, and Ivan stood next to her dicing cucumbers and tomato for a salad, a midnight snack, fuel for bank robbers. Jasper sat in the armoury with the hatch open, oiling tomorrow’s tools, and Leo sat in an armchair in the living room with a map spread out on the table, studying alternative escape routes.

They jerked to a halt, prepared themselves. Nobody had any business being here, less than a day before the operation.

Leo crept to the bedroom window and angled up the blind, but couldn’t see under the porch roof from there, so he went down the stairs towards the front door. A hand had been pressed over the peephole.

Another knock.

Jasper emerged from the armoury with two automatic rifles, handed one to Leo, who placed it on the shelf in the hall and covered it with a jacket, and then crept into the kitchen with the other.

‘Go upstairs. And take Anneli with you,’ Leo whispered to his father. He waited until they disappeared up the stairs before opening the door.

‘So have you been bad or good?’

The two of them. Here. Leo relaxed and smiled.

‘Come in.’

He hugged Felix and Vincent. His brothers were back.

‘Come in, damn it!’

Jasper approached from the kitchen, gun in hand.

‘I guess the whole family’s together!’

‘You’re not part of this family,’ said Vincent, unable to look at Jasper for more than a moment.

Anneli came down from upstairs. And behind her, Ivan, who stopped halfway down. Felix crumpled up into immediate anger.

‘What the hell is
he
doing here?’

‘It’s obvious what he’s doing here,’ replied Leo.

‘No, it’s fucking not!’

‘You left. Someone had to take your place.’

Ivan continued down the stairs.

‘My boys,’ he said, smiling a little more broadly with each step. ‘Vincent, you’re so big now. And Felix … see, Leo, they’re here now!’

It was so crowded in the little hallway. Leo felt squeezed from two directions. Behind him, his impatient father wanted to go forward and say hello, in front of him his two younger brothers had no intention of doing so.

‘We want to talk to you. Me and Vincent. Alone,’ Felix said to him.

Leo nodded towards the room with the safe in the floor, and the three brothers went in and closed the door.

‘I know what you’re thinking,’ said Felix, once they were alone. ‘But we haven’t changed our minds. We’re not here to rob banks.’

Felix took an envelope from his jacket’s inner pocket.

‘Here. Seventy thousand. That’s all we have left. If you need money, if that’s why, then take it, Leo. And forget about robbing that damn bank!’

At first Leo had just stared at the envelope. Now he realised.

‘You come here,
here
, Felix, like fucking Santa Claus handing out Christmas presents. And then what? Seventy thousand will only last a few months.’

‘Then we’ll move back here, if you want us to. We still have a company, don’t we? A real construction company? We can do what we did before. We can build houses together.’

The envelope hung in the air between them.

‘Vincent, do you still agree with him?’

‘I don’t know.’

‘Don’t know?’

‘I don’t know!’

Leo inclined his head a little to one side, and smiled.

‘But what you do
know
, Vincent, is that you can’t stand sitting at home and worrying about it either. So it’s decision time. We’re going tomorrow.’

Felix dropped the envelope that nobody wanted.

‘So you’re going to rob a bank together? Seriously? You … four?’

‘Yes.’

‘Leo, that envelope is yours. I’m leaving now. I didn’t come here to rob a bank – I came here to stop you from doing it. And you will never ask us that question again. Not me, not Vincent.’

He went to the door, opened it, turned round.

‘Vincent? I’m going back home tomorrow morning. Our tickets are already booked. You have my number if you want to go with me.’

Ivan got up from the kitchen chair, as if he had been waiting.

‘Wait!’

Felix didn’t.

‘Wait, I want to talk to you!’

He just barely got hold of Felix’s arm.

‘Let me go, damn it!’

‘Listen to me, we haven’t seen each other—’

‘Listen? To you? You’re gonna rob a bank with your own son?’

Ivan let go.

‘Felix. My boy. I’m here to see you. You. Leo. Vincent. I thought we could … work together. All of us.’

‘What?’

A few metres between them, but close enough to tell that his breath was different, didn’t smell of alcohol.

‘Do you think I would want to rob a bank … with you? Do you think I even want to be in the same room as you? After what you made me do to my mother? Do you really believe that? You can go to hell!’

‘You have to let go of that someday, Felix, it’s not me you’re angry at … you’re angry with him, the man you knew when you were little, who wasn’t much older than Leo is now. Let go of it. And look at me now, I’m not the same. You have to let go.’

‘I have to … let go? Can you answer me one thing – who opened the fucking door when you came and smashed in our mother’s face? Was it me? Was it Vincent? Was it Leo? Do you remember? Or should I let go of that, too?’

He took a step closer to his father. He cleared his throat, collecting saliva.

And then he spat.

It landed a little higher this time, not on the cheek and neck as with his mother, but it ran down the old man’s face in exactly the same way.

‘What the hell are you two doing?’

Leo ran out of the side room and pressed one hand against his father’s chest and the other on his brother’s chest, forcing them in opposite directions.

‘Now leave, Felix.’

Vincent stood there. Alone. And he watched his father wipe away the saliva with his shirt sleeve and Felix open the front door.

‘Wait!’

He rushed out into the hall, past his father, past Leo.

‘I’m going with you.’

83

IVAN HAD BEEN
lying there for an hour, maybe two, when he suddenly realised what it was. The smell was bothering him. He sat up and held
the pillow to his nose. Yep. That was it. The intrusive smell that was so familiar; the pillowcase smelled of Britt-Marie.

Had she slept here?

It pulled him back. He was there.
Snitch
. She buzzed around him, and he was sitting again on the edge of a completely different bed – in a jail cell just days after a Molotov cocktail had been thrown – and he had been betrayed.
Snitch
. And a policeman had opened the cell door with a bandage around his right hand and stepped in uninvited, wanting to talk.

Ivan hadn’t wanted to talk.

Still that damned pig had stood there demanding answers.

– How … could you bring your own son with you?

– What are you talking about?

– I’m talking about your ten-year-old son, and how you took him along to incinerate your wife. His mother.

– I’ve got nothing to say to you.

– Listen, your son Leo seems like a good boy, he—

– I don’t want to talk to you. I don’t have to. I’m sitting in a jail cell, but I decide when I want to talk. So leave. Get out of here!

– You don’t have to talk to me. Because your son already has. Leo’s already told us everything. How you made the bomb. How you took him in the car, parked it on the road, how you went through the raspberry bushes, how you waited there gaping before you threw it through the basement window.

– I didn’t throw any bomb. And my son would never talk.

– But he did. And everything went so smoothly, he did so of his own free will and his mother was there. I sat down at your kitchen table with your son for over an hour.

– So some fucking cop got my son to sit for an hour informing on me?

– Yes.

– Then what the hell happened to your hand? My son would never talk. In my family, we don’t snitch.

– He talked because he needed to talk, don’t you understand that? You’re his father, Ivan. For his sake, tell me what happened. So he doesn’t have to bear this alone.

– Get the fuck out of here! Now!

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